Banda folds over Madonna

Africa

Friday 12 April 2013 - 6:19pm

Malawian President Joyce Banda has reprimanded officials in her office after a statement referring to pop star Madonna as a bully surfaced. Banda says she was not the author of the statement.
Video: Reuters

Malawi's President Joyce Banda has come under scrutiny for her migrant labour agreements.

Malawi - President Joyce Banda has "reprimanded" aides who issued a scathing attack on Madonna that fuelled a very public spat with the pop star, a source at the presidency said Friday.

She "reprimanded officers in the State House press department for issuing the statement without consulting her," an official in Banda's office told a news agency on condition of anonymity.

Banda's State House on Wednesday issued a four-page statement suggesting Madonna demanded VIP treatment, engaged in emotional blackmail, exaggerated her charity work, and was a worse guest than Chuck Norris or Bono.

It was, the statement said, "strange and depressing" that the singer seemed to want "Malawi to be forever chained to the obligation of gratitude" for having adopted two Malawian children.

Madonna reacted angrily to the statement, accusing the government of peddling lies about her charity work.

"I am saddened that President Joyce Banda has chosen to release lies about what we've accomplished, my intentions, how I personally conducted myself while visiting Malawi, and other untruths," Madonna said in a statement.

Press officer Tusekele Mwanyongo, who signed off on the government statement, refused to comment on the furore it has caused.

"I am out of it," he said.

During the trip, Madonna visited schools her charity has built, flanked by her four children, including David Banda and Mercy James who she adopted from the country.

The statement also took a swipe at her for claiming to have built 10 schools when she had built classrooms.

Madonna's charity has poured millions of dollars into the support of orphans in Malawi, which is ranked by the UN Human Development Index as one of the world's 20 least developed countries.